1997
Orbit This imaginative Millennium bid planned to make Bristol host to
a giant scaled model of the Solar System (an Orrery) stretching from
Bristol's Downs to the Docks, marking the Millennium with a planetary
clock.
“Few
people really understand the minute scale of the planets compared to
the vast distances which separate them. Even on the scale we have selected,
the Sun placed at the docks measures 840mm across and Pluto way out
on the Downs only 1.7mm (That is about the size of an “o”
on this page.)"
Quoted
from Mike Richards, (Bristol - based architect (Inscape), who, together
with Martin Rieser was co-founder of the Orbit Millennium Project.)
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Each of the 9 planets would have been be displayed inside three-sided
obelisks, 6 metres high, finished in fine materials, such as granite,
marble, glass, bronze and stainless steel: selected by colour and texture
to match the characteristics of the individual planet and designed by
artist's commission. The obelisks were designed to last 100 years or
more and follow a long tradition of market crosses and commemorative
memorials. We intended that the project would endure and celebrate the
start of the new Millennium.Scientific data on the planet and information
on a cross - Bristol planet trail were to be incised on each surface.
At the very centre of the scheme, the sun was be surrounded by interactive
computer - controlled representations of the planets housed inside a
glass dome, which generated the “Music of the spheres” as
they move. A powerful laser was to be mounted on the sun dome and at
the top of each obelisk, to project beacons into the night sky above
Bristol on selected dates.
The project raised £12000 in pilot money, but was ultimately rejected
by the Milllennium Commission
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